I build websites for SaaS founders. If your product is great but your website isn't converting, I'll review it for free.

Hi, I'm Ritesh.

I'm not here to waste your time.

I design and redesign websites for businesses and SaaS founders who want a stronger online presence and better conversions.

A lot of great products lose customers because their websites don't explain the value clearly or don't build enough trust.

That's exactly what I help fix.

If that sounds like something you need, send me a message. I'd be happy to take a look at your website.

reddit.com
u/RiteshGhodela — 1 day ago

Is your landing page leaking conversions? Drop your link—I redesign high-converting UI for bootstrapped startups.

You have about 3 seconds to convince a visitor before they bounce. If your UI looks outdated or messy, people assume your product is buggy too.

I specialize in clean, modern, and conversion-focused web redesigns for micro-SaaS and indie businesses at a fraction of standard agency rates. Comment your website URL below—I’ll tell you your biggest design bottleneck and how quickly we can revamp it.

reddit.com
u/RiteshGhodela — 1 day ago

I’m sick of seeing good indie SaaS products fail because of ugly landing pages. Let’s fix yours at indie-hacker prices.

Most solo founders spend months building incredible backend tech, but their landing page looks like a template from 2018 and conversion rates suffer. You don't need a $3,000 agency rebrand.

I am taking on 4 frontend design/redesign projects this week specifically for bootstrapped founders. Drop your website link (or what you are building) below. I'll take a quick look and let you know how we can transform it without burning your runway.

reddit.com
u/RiteshGhodela — 1 day ago

Roasting your SaaS/Website UI: Drop your link and I'll give you a free UX audit.

Want to know why users are bouncing? Leave your link below. I’ll review your landing page, give you a design score, and DM you the top 3 UX mistakes costing you conversions.

reddit.com
u/RiteshGhodela — 3 days ago

Have you ever redesigned your website and realized the problem wasn't your product after all?

One thing I've noticed with early-stage SaaS is how quickly we assume low signups mean something is wrong with the product.

Sometimes that's true.

But sometimes people leave before they even understand what you've built.

I've seen websites where:

  • The headline never explains what the product actually does.
  • The first CTA asks visitors to book a demo before they've built any trust.
  • The homepage focuses on features instead of the problem it solves.
  • Mobile users get a completely different (and worse) experience.

The product might be solid, but if visitors are confused in the first 10 seconds, they never stick around long enough to find out.

I'm curious—has anyone here redesigned their website and actually seen a noticeable improvement in signups, demo bookings, or customer conversations?

What ended up making the biggest difference?

reddit.com
u/RiteshGhodela — 4 days ago

I think many early-stage startups...

I think many early-stage startups diagnose the wrong problem.

When conversions are low, the first instinct is usually:

\- Buy more ads

\- Improve SEO

\- Post more on social media

But after reviewing dozens of startup websites, I've noticed a pattern.

The issue often isn't traffic—it's clarity.

When someone lands on your homepage, they're subconsciously trying to answer a few questions almost immediately:

• What does this product actually do?

• Is it built for someone like me?

• Why is it different from the alternatives?

• Can I trust this company?

If those answers aren't obvious within the first few seconds, visitors don't spend time investigating. They leave.

That's why adding more traffic doesn't always improve results. It simply increases the number of people who experience the same confusion.

Good design isn't about making a page look modern.

It's about reducing cognitive effort so users can make confident decisions.

A homepage isn't just a visual asset—it's part of your sales process.

I'm curious:

What's the biggest clarity issue you've seen on startup websites? Was it messaging, navigation, or something else?

reddit.com
u/RiteshGhodela — 6 days ago

Every agency starts with one client. I'm looking for mine.

Hey everyone,

After months of learning, building, and overthinking, I finally decided to stop waiting for the "perfect time" and launch my own web agency.

I'm at the beginning of the journey, which means I'm looking for my very first clients.

I mainly help:

  • 🚀 Startups
  • 💼 Small Business Owners
  • ⚡ SaaS Founders

My services include:

✅ Custom Website Design
✅ Landing Pages
✅ Product/UI Design
✅ Website Management & Maintenance
✅ Performance & UX Improvements
✅ Website Audits

One thing I've noticed while reviewing dozens of websites is that many businesses lose potential customers because of simple issues they don't realize exist:

  • Slow loading pages
  • Poor mobile experience
  • Confusing navigation
  • Weak calls-to-action
  • Broken forms
  • UX mistakes that hurt conversions

I'd love to build a reputation by genuinely helping people.

So, if you have a website, leave it in the comments (or DM me if you'd rather keep it private), and I'll send you a free audit with:

  • What's working well
  • What could be improved
  • Quick wins you can implement
  • UX, performance, and conversion suggestions

No pressure, no hard sales—just honest feedback.

And if you're a founder who's been thinking about building a new website or redesigning an existing one, I'd be grateful for the opportunity to work with you.

Every successful agency started with someone willing to take a chance on them.

Maybe that first client is somewhere in this community.

Thanks for reading. ❤️

reddit.com
u/RiteshGhodela — 7 days ago
▲ 3 r/u_RiteshGhodela+2 crossposts

Launched my first MicroSaaS today – would love some honest feedback

Hey everyone,

Today I launched my first MicroSaaS: https://gadgetgyan.shop

I'm a web developer and this is my first attempt at building and launching a product from scratch. It has been a great learning experience, from designing and developing the platform to finally putting it live.

I'm not here to sell anything—I genuinely want feedback from people who build and use products.

If you have a few minutes, I'd appreciate it if you could:

  • Check out the website
  • Test the user experience
  • Share any bugs, issues, or suggestions
  • Tell me what you'd improve if this were your product

I'm open to all feedback, whether positive or critical. My goal is to learn and make it better.

Thanks for your time!

u/RiteshGhodela — 11 days ago